Facial expressions in Auslan: why signing is more than your hands
New learners often focus entirely on their hands. But in Auslan, your face does a huge amount of the work. Eyebrows, mouth shape, head movement and eye gaze all carry meaning. Together they’re called non-manual features, and they’re part of the grammar of the language.

Your face is part of the grammar
In spoken English, you change meaning with your tone of voice. In Auslan, you do a lot of that work with your face. Raising your eyebrows can turn a statement into a yes/no question; furrowing them can mark a different kind of question; and the intensity of an expression can show how big, small, near or far something is. The same handshape can mean different things depending on the non-manual features that go with it.
What counts as a non-manual feature
- Eyebrows: marking questions, emphasis and conditionals.
- Mouth shapes: some signs require a specific mouth pattern to be correct.
- Head and body movement: tilts and shifts that signal topic, comparison or who is speaking.
- Eye gaze: directing attention and showing who or what you’re referring to.
Why this trips up beginners
Many people learn the handshapes first and feel self-conscious about using their face. But signing with a flat expression can come across as unclear or even rude, in the same way a monotone voice would. Using facial expression is one of the fastest ways to look more natural and be understood, which is why it’s on our list of common beginner mistakes. It’s also a big part of why the myth that “you only need your hands” is so misleading.
Frequently asked questions
- Do facial expressions really matter in Auslan?
- Yes, they're essential. In Auslan, the face, eyebrows, mouth and eye gaze are part of the grammar, not just emotion. The same handshape can mean different things depending on the expression that goes with it, so signing without facial expression can be unclear or even change your meaning.
- What are non-manual features?
- Non-manual features (NMFs) are the parts of signing that don't use the hands: facial expressions, eyebrow movement, mouth shapes, head tilts and eye gaze. They carry grammatical information. For example, raised eyebrows can mark a question, and they show emphasis, tone and more.
- How do I practise facial expressions when learning Auslan?
- Watch native signers closely and copy the whole picture: face and body, not just hands. Practising in front of a mirror or camera helps you notice whether your expression matches your message. Video lessons from fluent signers are far more useful than static charts for this.
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